Monday, January 9, 2012

October 2011 marked the passing away of two men well-known in the computation and communications industries. One was Steve Jobs. In his honor Apple, Microsoft, and Disneyland all flew their flags at half-staff. October 16, 2011, was declared "Steve Jobs Day" in California. President Obama gave a eulogy calling Jobs “among the greatest of American innovators … a visionary”.

The other was Dennis Ritchie.

Ritchie died alone. His passing was not mentioned on the TV news, and was not picked up as a major item by the press. The only formal recognition was the dedication to his memory of the Fedora 16 distribution. For those who don’t recognize his name, Ritchie is the R in K&R (Kernighan and Ritchie’s “The C Programming Language”), a book known by heart to everyone who has ever written in C. In addition to creating C and introducing many of the constructs of imperative programming, Ritchie, along with Ken Thompson, created the UNIX operating system. In fact, C was created as a vehicle to make UNIX more portable.

For his contributions to computer science, Ritchie was awarded the Turing Award, the Hamming Medal, and the US National Medal of Technology. Until his retirement in 2007, Ritchie was head of research at Lucent’s System Software Department.

The papers eulogized Jobs as a great inventor, but were not very specific as to what precisely he invented. Of course they extolled technologies and devices with which his name is connected - the Apple 2, the MacIntosh, the mouse+icon GUI, the iPod, iPhone, and iPad, but mostly admitted that his contributions were in the area of design and evangelization, rather than invention. What they omitted was his major invention – his amazingly successful method of monetizing. Bill Gates convinced people to pay for software rather than receive it free of charge when purchasing hardware, but it was Steve Jobs who convinced people to give him a 30% royalty on third-party software (and music and videos) just in order to use it on his hardware.

In contrast, Ritchie convinced his employer AT&T to distribute UNIX to universities, under license but free of charge. The sources (mostly in C) were widely circulated in the book form and enabled programmers to enhance its features as well as to create their own software. After its divestiture AT&T was allowed to market software and quickly changed Unix System V into a proprietary closed system. This prompted a group at Berkeley to continue development of the BSD UNIX as an Open Source alternative, Ritchie to help in the development of the GNU free version of UNIX, and eventually Linux Torvalds to create Linux.

The computer industry is now segmented into Microsoft, Google/Android, and Apple. Microsoft’s most important asset is its Windows Operating System; this indeed is not based on UNIX but is programmed in C++ and promotes C#, two direct descendants of C. Google’s Android may exploit the Java language, not a direct descendent of C, but is itself based on Linux, a descendant of UNIX. And Job’s Apple uses the iOS operating system, a version of UNIX, and Objective C language – a derivative of C. So while Job’s influence is limited to a small a minority of PCs and one sector of the smartphone market, there is no mainstream computer or smart device without Ritchie’s fingerprints all over it.